Skip to main content

rocks2dust

2.6K items sold
180 followers

All items

About

I am primarily a collector, but in collecting over the years I ve managed to accumulate duplicates and extras, which I sometimes offer here, as I have time to photograph and list. Enjoy browsing!
Location: United StatesMember since: 21 November 2002

All Feedback (3,700)

t***i (1142)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past year
Verified purchase
AAA SELLER ✨️ ✨️ ✨️ ✨️ ✨️ ✨️ ✨️
a***y (914)- Feedback left by buyer.
More than a year ago
Verified purchase
Securely packed and quick ship—thanks! Great communication! Will do biz again!
a***y (914)- Feedback left by buyer.
More than a year ago
Verified purchase
Securely packed and quick ship—thanks! Great communication! Will do biz again!
0***i (140)- Feedback left by buyer.
More than a year ago
Verified purchase
Extraordinary deal: even gave me an additional gift. Great communication: well packaged: fast delivery
e***e (2)- Feedback left by buyer.
More than a year ago
Verified purchase
The stone was beautiful and well packaged with bonus stones added in.
b***p (1581)- Feedback left by buyer.
More than a year ago
Verified purchase
Fast shipping well packaged great communication
Reviews (9)
12 October 2006
A seamy Jazz Age melodrama
This DVD is a must-see for fans of Louise Brooks, though it is hardly among her best. Part of the problem is the story, which gives her precious few opportunities to shine. The story revolves around rape, prostitution and similar themes. Not suitable for children, though you'd never get them to sit through it. This is a morality tale with precious little morality, underlined by bleak, stagey sets and lighting. And after a relentlessly depressing story line, the ending seems contrived. Though the viewer develops no empathy for the characters, there are still moments of great acting. The DVD version is crisp, though there are obvious losses in the film in some sections. For those unfamiliar with Louise Brooks' work, it might be better to start with her amazing performance in "Pandora's Box."
0 of 1 found this helpful
14 October 2006
Inventive fun
Although this is great comedy, it comes wrapped around a cautionary tale as appropriate to today as it was a half century ago. In this film, progress is pitted against industrial greed. And the textile industry, with vested interests in the status quo, puts up a furious fight to quash a new fabric which, while it would be a boon to humanity, would cut into their profits. Even though they win the fight, the film leaves us with a glimmer of hope that the struggle might continue. Many of the cast can be recognized from other Guiness comedies. Joan Greenwood is unforgetable as the daughter of an industrialist who falls for Guiness's single-minded inventor. Her father, a mill owner, is acted by Cecil Parker, while Ernest Thesiger plays an appropriately sinister head of the industrial cartel. Despite the serious message, this is a comedy and high comedy at that. Guiness is always enjoyable to watch, and this is one of his many finer performances. Definitely on my list of "must have" comedies.
0 of 1 found this helpful
12 October 2006
Only the Criterion Collection release
A masterpiece from one of the world's great directors, the Criterion release finally gives us a worthy transfer to DVD. Earlier DVD releases were muddy, with sometimes difficult subtitles, and inferior sound. If you take nothing else from this review, let it be my recommendation to check that you are purchasing the Criterion release. Now on to the movie... "Ran" is Akiro Kurosawa's fusion of Shakespear's "King Lear," a sprinkling of "MacBeth," his own viewpoint on the lessons of aging, and material drawn from Japanese history. Like "King Lear," "Ran" gets off to a slow start. The plot gathers force as Kurosawa draws you into the story, building to some of the most incredible action-filled battles ever filmed, and on to a profound, thought-provoking ending. In Japanese, "Ran" means "Chaos" - and there is chaos aplenty in this story - but this is chaos with a purpose. I don't propose to tell the plot - it would be pointless. For those who know Shakespeare's Lear, the first viewing will be filled with moments of recognition. For those who don't know "King Lear," then the story will stand on its own, and perhaps encourage some to seek out Shakespeare's plays. Kurosawa's works are experiences which are visually told, not narrated. By the time "Ran" was ready to be filmed, Akiro Kurosawa was regarded as something of a has-been in Japan. Many of those who worked with him during his glory days in the 1950's and early 1960's had gone on to other directors and projects. He had developed a reputation for being "difficult" in Hollywood (where he had been fired from "Tora! Tora! Tora!"). And this new project, which ended up being the most expensive movie in Japanese film history, was seen as a risky investment in a passé director doing a commercially unpopular costume drama. With little support in Japan, Kurosawa ended up going to overseas investors to secure financing (hence the credits to the French backers). Added to all this, the death of his wife during early production meant that "Ran" was a hugely difficult enterprise for a seventy-four year old to pull off - and it is a masterpiece. The Criterion package also includes some worthy extras. Full-length documentaries on the filming by Chris Marker and Sidney Lumet make one wonder at the sheer logistics of putting the director's sweeping vision onto film. There are also gorgeous paintings and sketches by Kurosawa, which he had created to storyboard the film years prior to the actual filming. These are overlaid onto the soundtrack so that you can see how close he came to implementing his ideas. Finally there is an interview with the actor, Tatsuya Nakadai, who plays the lead (a shock to see out of makeup and character). Suffice to say that "Ran" has something in it for nearly any viewer - stunning scenery, betrayal, romance, lust, some of the best battles on film, intrigue, plot twists, comedy, pathos, and a facinating insight into Japan's cultural heritage. It is not suitable for pre-teens due to graphic violence. It is a must-see for everyone else.
3 of 5 found this helpful